The Ilford Emergency Hospital scheme was
inaugurated by the Ilford Medical Society in 1904 to establish a
hospital to serve the Ilford, Barking and Dagenham areas. A
Hospital Committee was appointed in 1905 and, in 1907, the Ilford
Emergency Hospital was incorporated under the Companies Act.

The foundation stone was laid in 1910 and in
1912 the Ilford Emergency Hospital opened in Abbey Road, Newbury Park.
It had 20 beds.

During WW1, in May 1915, it became an
approved military hospital with 56 beds, together with its neighbour, Valentines Mansion.
Both were affiliated with Colchester Military Hospital and
provided 137 beds (119 of which were for military use). They
ceased to be military hospitals in March 1919, having treated some
1,429 wounded and sick servicemen.

In 1920 the Hospital was extended to 42 beds.

In 1921 the LCC built the Becontree
Estate,
a new town, on 300 acres of what had been prairie land on the
outskirts of Dagenham. The Estate had been planned as a
working-class residential area to eventually house some 120,000 people,
the largest housing estate in the world. Although sites for
schools, a hospital and other ancillary health provision, municipal
requirements, open spaces and other amenities had been provided in the
initial layout, as the building scheme developed "the best-laid schemes
o' mice an' men gang aft agley".
The LCC considered it had fulfilled its role as a landlord by
providing new housing, and that the provision of any further
infrastructure was the remit of the Essex County Council.

In
1923 King George V and Queen Mary visited Becontree. The Queen
urged the importance of providing hospital accommodation and a Fund
was inaugurated to create a voluntary hospital for the half-million
residents of Thames-side East (Barking, Becontree, Dagenham, Ilford and
Manor Park), with an auxiliary health centre to be located in Dagenham.
While debate raged as to a suitable site for the new hospital,
the only acute in-patient facilities available for the new population
were at the Ilford Emergency Hospital.

In 1925 the Hospital was extended again, to
54 beds, including a temporary children's ward with 12 beds.

In 1926 the War Memorial Children's Wing, a
permanent children's ward with 22 beds named after Walter Stevens,
Chairman of the Ilford War Memorial Fund , was built on a 3.25 acre
site to the west of the Hospital, beside the town's War Memorial and
its
garden. The entrance to the Wing, an antechamber named the
Memorial Hall, was erected on the War Memorial side.
The Wing was officially opened by Lady Patricia Ramsay and the
first patients were admitted in September 1927. The Hospital then
had 64 beds in public wards (14 for male patients, 14 for female and 22
for children) and 14 private patient rooms.

The public wards were charity wards for
those who could not afford private care. The doctors gave their
services free of charge but patients, if in a position to do so, were
asked to contribute to the cost of their maintenance while in hospital.
The private patient wards were self-supporting; patients paid a
fixed fee to the Hospital and arranged the professional fees privately
with their doctor. Surgical cases were charged one guinea
(£1.05) for the use of the operating theatre. The fee for a
private room - 5 gns (£5.25) a week or 15 shillings (75p) a day
(minimum charge 1 gn (£1.05) or 10s 6d (£0.?) in shared
rooms - included accommodation,
board, nursing care and medication, as
well as the necessary stimulants and surgical dressings, etc., but
there would be additional charges for special nurses (and their
laundry, board and lodging), massage or electrical treatment,
pathological tests, X-ray examinations, expensive remedies or daily or
continuous dressings ordered by the clinician in charge.

Two resident House Officers were appointed
in 1926, so the Hospital now had a doctor on the premises. Some
£800 was still needed for new X-ray equipment but, regardless of
this, a piece of land was bought freehold for £520 for possible
expansion later.

By the end of the 1920s the scheme to build
a hospital at Becontree Heath had come to nothing and it had been
decided to expand the Ilford Emergency Hospital and to establish a Health Centre at Becontree, which would be
staffed by the Hospital.

In October 1927 the Mayor of Ilford, who was
also President of the Hospital, opened a new wing which had cost
£5,200. It was intended to contain 64 beds in two
ward blocks and a new Casualty Department reception room, but the new
premises had to be used as the Out-Patients Department, administrative
offices, nurses' quarters and a dining room until further extensions
were completed, when they could revert to their proper uses. The
opening of the temporary Out-Patients Department was delayed until
medical staff could be appointed and, in the meantime, the space was
used as a clinic for schoolchildren referred by the Ilford Borough
Council and local Maternity and Child Welfare Cinics for removal of
tonsils and adenoids (a small ward was set aside in the War Memorial
Children's Wing for such cases if they had to be retained overnight).

In 1928 the King George's Hospital Building
Fund was inaugurated. King George V agreed to allow the proposed
Hospital to be associated with his name, and the King and Queen headed
an Appeal for the Building Fund which had been issued by the Lord
Mayor of London and the Chairman of the LCC. The first phase of
the building plan, when there was sufficient money, was to erect a ward
block containing some 130 beds, an Out-Patients Department, a Nurses'
Home and an administration block. The estimated cost of this plan
was £60,000, of which £30,000 had already been raised.

By 1929 some £100,000 was available
for building and the Honorary Consultant medical staff were appointed.
The foundation stone for the King George Hospital was laid on the
4.5 acre site and, instead of Abbey Road, the new hospital would front
south to Eastern Avenue.

The Casualty Department, 4 single-storey ward blocks and the mortuary
opened first in 1930. Building work then began in May on further
ward blocks (including private patient rooms), the administration
offices, the Out-Patients Department, the X-ray Department,
the operating theatre, the kitchen and store rooms, the Nurses' Home,
and the boiler house. The cost of the buildings and their
equipment came to £107,500.

The King George Hospital (a Royal Charter had been granted to the
Hospital in 1930) was officially opened by the King himself on 18th
July 1931. Accompanied by the Queen, on his way to the opening
ceremony, he had passed through the Becontree Estate and visited its
newly opened Health Centre.

The second phase of the Hospital building plan - to increase the bed
complement to 288 beds - began in 1931. Two new ward blocks of 24
beds each were to be erected, as well as a 2-storey private patients
block, and a second storey added to each of the existing single-storey
ward blocks. (Phase 3, to increase the complement to 392 by
building a new 2-storey ward block and adding a second storey above the
children's ward never seems to have been realised.)

In 1932 two new wards of 54 beds - the Ford and Erskine-Bolst Wards -
were opened. Two obsolete wards of 48 beds closed, thereby
gaining the Hospital only 12 extra beds. The Hospital then had
142 beds and it was planned to build another ward block of 54 beds.

In June 1934 the foundation stone for a new wing - the Baker Memorial
Wing - was laid by Mr Henry Thomas Baker, who had gifted the money for
the new building the previous year.

In October 1934 a new X-ray treatment department was installed to
provide radiation treatment for skin disorders and malignant tumours.
It was paid for by the Corporations of Ilford and Barking, and
Dagenham Urban District Council. Between the months of November
1934 and February 1935 some 495 patients received treatment in the new
department.

During 1934 gifts to the Hospital included flowers, fruit and
vegetables, eggs, sugar, jam, cake, pheasants, rabbits, a lamb carcass,
fish, a bath chair, a wheelchair, a caliper, Hamilton-Ewing apparatus,
a bed pan, earphones, books and magazines, and tinfoil and silver foil.

Visiting hours were on Wednesdays and Saturdays (and Public Holidays)
from 14.00 to 16.00 for adults and from 15.00 to 15.30 for
children and, for near relatives, on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from
19.15 to 19.45, unless the patient was on the Danger List.

The Baker Memorial Wing opened on 19th January 1935. It contained
a private nursing suite providing 21 beds on the ground floor with a
spacious solarium at the southern end for convalescent patients, and a
large general ward with 34 beds on the first floor. In the same
year extensions were built onto the Nurses' Home, the Medical Officers'
residency and the Walter Stevens Children's Ward. The Casualty
Department was also extended with additional waiting rooms, consulting
rooms and recovery wards (the casualty and out-patient services had
expanded by 20% since the Department had first been built). After
these works were completed, the Hospital had expanded from 142 to 207
beds and it was estimated that 100 guineas (£105) was required
daily for its maintenance.

In 1936 the Board of Governors called for plans to increase the bed
complement to 500 beds and prepared an Appeal to raise £330,000.
However, the outbreak of WW2 intervened and the project was
postponed.

During WW2 the Hospital joined the Emergency
Medical Service (EMS), with 43 of its 207 beds reserved for
air-raid casualties and servicemen.

After the war, in 1945, the Gray
Topping survey,
commissioned by the government, revealed a serious deficit of acute and
chronic beds in the Ilford area. It recommended that the Hospital
should be extended to 500 acute and 100 chronic beds, and a new
hospital built for south Ilford of 700 acute and 150 chronic beds.

In 1952 a new Out-Patients Department opened. It was of a pre-war
design with a waiting hall, consulting rooms and an Almoner's office,
but the architect had forgotten to include changing rooms and these had
to be built into the blind end of a passage.

By 1954 the Hospital had become overcrowded. the male pneumonia
ward was described by the King's Fund as large and bleak; it had no bed
curtains and there was a lack of washing space for the patients.
The large children's ward was well-equipped but crowded; it had
11 beds in its main portion, with
7 beds separated off and 9 cubicles.
The separate tonsils ward contained 8 beds.

In 1955 the electricity supply was changed from direct to alternating
current - an urgent necessity as all modern hospital apparatus was run
on the latter. The Hospital Management Committee had hoped that
the work would be carried out by the local authority but it had become
apparent in 1954 that the authority was not interested in undertaking
this changeover at its own expense as the Hospital had an adequate
supply. In the event, the Hospital's Works Department carried out
the work.

By 1956 the Ilford and Barking Group had 662 beds for all purposes, but
the number of staffed beds (excluding those for TB, infectious
diseases, mental and convalescent patients) was only 346; there were
virtually no beds for the elderly chronically sick. It was
estimated that the Group needed some 1,051 beds - a shortfall of 705.

While the Hospital had 211 general beds, its services were stretched
beyond their capacity and large numbers of surgical patients were
forced to seek treatment outside the Ilford and Barking Group catchment
area. Its Casualty Department, which received all casualties from
the Southend By-Pass (that is, the A12 - Eastern Avenue), was
inadequate. It was castigated in the
press as a 'disgrace' but, in 1956, managed to treat 35,000 patients in
its limited space - a small hall measuring 20 ft by 20 ft (6 metres by
6 metres),
where minor casualties were treated, while major casualties were
brought through to two small cubicles.

By now the Regional Hospital Board had realised that there was little
hope of a new hospital being built in the area and, in 1957,
relinguished the land in Loxford Lane which it had reserved for many
years as a possible site.

In 1957 the Hospital was upgraded and modernised. A new
purpose-built fridge (Brentwood model) was bought for the storage of
blood, and a new switchboard installed, together with a Multitone
Personal Staff Location System for £1,800. The medical
staff quarters were improved at a cost of £1,500 and the Nurses'
Home redecorated.

The Walter Stevens Children's Ward and George Maggs Ward (a female
surgical ward with 12 beds) were replanned and given a general
upgrading, at the cost of £1,767. Wooden bed partitions
were replaced by bed curtains. A clinical room was provided, as
well as a Sister's office, adequate toilet facilities, a sluice room
and a dirty linen sorting room. Ilford Ward, which had 34 general
beds and 4 additional beds (which were nearly always in use) was
subdivided into smaller units of 4 to 8 beds.

The fees for a single private room per day in the Baker Memorial Wing
were now £2 14s (£2.70), or £2 12s (£2.60) for
a
shared 2-bedded room; one of the 7 amenity beds cost 12 shillings
(£0.60).

In August the only bed lift in the Hospital had to undergo urgent
repairs and the operating theatre had to close for two weeks.
Arrangements were made with the Emergency
Bed Service
for patients to be sent to neighbouring hospitals. The
opportunity was seized to modernise and redecorate the major theatre
suite and to replace the equipment. A new Allen
& Hanbury operating table was installed at the cost of
£1,000.

Although the Hospital was legally required to store patients' casenotes
for 6 years, the medical staff preferred to keep them longer (ad
infinitum) and the filing equipment was extended to take a further four
years of medical records.

In September 1957 a new boiler house was completed, which would supply
both the King George Hospital and the Ilford
Maternity Hospital.

During 1959 a £1m scheme to enlarge the King George Hospital to
300 beds was debated, but this plan was given lower priority than the
extensions to Barking Hospital.
Instead, the Casualty Department was upgraded and a new X-ray set
was installed. The Ministry of Health agreed to a new
Out-Patients Department (the current one was too small); Physiotherapy
and Occupational Therapy Departments were added to the extension scheme
in a new building on the site, to begin in 1963, once demolition of
some parts had been completed. The extension plan would be
carried out in four stages over 6 to 7 years.

In June 1959 Barking Hospital began to undertake general surgery,
concentrating on bringing down the King George Hospital's waiting list
(the waiting time for a hernia operation or removal of varicose veins
was 5 years).

In September 1960 an extension to the Nurses' Training Unit was
completed at the cost of £14,291. It was officially opened
by the Lord Lieutenant of Essex, Sir John Ruggles-Brise, and contained
a classroom for 20 pupils, a demonstration room and a library.

During the early 1960s Barking, Ford, Bolst, Dagenham and Ilford Wards
were improved and upgraded, with new furniture and equipment. The
Physiotherapy, Occupational Therapy and Pathology Departments were
extended. Plans were made to build a Nurses' Home with
self-contained apartments on the site of some condemned houses which
had already been demolished. Storage for medical records had
become a problem and the casenotes were being microfilmed (the London
Hospital had agreed to do this under generous terms) and a microfilm
reader was bought for £175. The charge for a single private
room had risen to £4 7s 0d (£4.55) a day or £4 3s 0d
(£4.15) for a shared 2-bedded room.

By the late 1960s the possibility of the Hospital being rebuilt on part
of the nearby Goodmayes
Hospital site was being raised.
Geographically, the Goodmayes Hospital occupied a 120-acre site
nearby on the south side of Eastern Avenue. The
current King George Hospital site, some 7 acres, was deemed too small
to allow the necessary development into a district general hospital of
the size dictated by government policy.

In 1974, following a major organisation of the NHS, the Hospital came
under the control of the East Roding District of the Redbridge and
Waltham Forest Area Health Authority, part of the North East Thames
Regional Health Authority. It had 203 beds. In 1978 the Ilford Maternity Hospitalbecame the 'West Wing' of the
King George Hospital. The two sites were separated by the War
Memorial and its garden.

During the 1980s the Hospital had 214 beds. Another NHS
reorganisation in 1982 placed it under the control of the Redbridge
District Health Authority.

In 1992 the Hospital had 197 beds and was under the administration of
the Redbridge Health Care Trust. It closed in 1993 when the newly
built King
George Hospital opened off Barley Lane.

Present status (May 2008)

The Hospital was demolished in 2001. The only surviving part is
the Grade II listed Memorial Hall close to the Ilford War Memorial.

Behind this is a modern Health Centre and a Diabetes Clinic, with a
1904 primary school on one side of it and terraced housing on the other.
The site is now occupied by a Bellway housing
development with 341 residential units (2-storey houses and 3- to
5-storey apartment blocks).

The Memorial Hall
was originally intended to be the entrance to the new Children's Wing,
but it was never used as such.
The commemorative stones on either side of the entrance door to the
Memorial Hall.
History plaques by the Memorial Hall and Gardens.The
Ilford War Memorial and the Gardens are located between the 7-acre site
of the former King George Hospital (to the east) and the 3-acre
site of the Ilford Maternity Hospital (to the west).

New housing (left) beside the Memorial Hall (right).

The gate posts of the former Hospital survive in Eastern
Avenue.

The Newbury Park Health Centre(left)
and the Diabetes Clinic (right) are the only healthcare facilities left
on the site.